Dorset Mid : Political and Demographic indicators

The table below shows some political and demographic numerical indicators
for the new Dorset Mid constituency, the 'South West' area
and nation.

The political measures include the Left/Right and International/National axes
(what does this mean).

The demographic measures are from the 2011 Census and include categories relating
to national identity, economic activity, health and education. These categories are
those which have the most relevance to political attitudes.

Indicator

Seat

South West

All GB

Party Winner

CON

CON

CON

Economic Position

15° Right

8° Right

0°

National Position

9° Nat

4° Nat

0°

EU Leave %

55%

53%

52%

British Identity

28%

27%

29%

Good Health

49%

47%

48%

UK Born

95%

92%

88%

Good Education

41%

40%

39%

Good Job

55%

50%

51%

High SEC

59%

52%

51%

Average Age

52.7

50.5

48.5

ABC1 Class

59%

54%

53%

Dorset Mid ranks #272 for "Leave",
#173 for "Right" and #273 for "National"
out of 600 new seats.

Indicators: Legend and Descriptions

Indicators : Legend and Descriptions

The colour scheme used in the table above is explained in the legend table below.
The eight census indicators (British Identity, Good Health, UK Born, Good Education,
Good Job, High SEC, Average Age and AB1 Class) all use the same 'Census' colour scheme
indicating whether the area's level is above or below the national average.

Topic

Cat 1

Cat 2

Cat 3

Cat 4

Cat 5

Economic Position

Very Left

Left

Centrist

Right

Very Right

National Position

Very Int

International

Centrist

National

Very Nat

EU Leave %

Very Remain

Remain

Balanced

Leave

Very Leave

Census

Very Low

Low

Medium

High

Very High

Indicator definitions are given in terms of political data definitions or census categories:

Indicator

CensusQuestion

Definition / Included Census Categories

Party Winner

–

Area party winner : actual election result or projected by Electoral Calculus

Economic Position

–

Economic position between 100° Left and 100° Right, estimated by Electoral Calculus from political and demographic data.

National Position

–

National position between 100° International and 100° National, estimated by Electoral Calculus from political and demographic data.

Dorset Mid: Map

Introduction

This page shows the detail of the calculations performed to estimate the general election result for 2017 had
the new boundaries for Dorset Mid been in force at that time. The basic idea of the calculation is to look at the
district council wards which make up the new seat, and estimate how they voted in 2017. This estimate is based
on the recent local election results in those wards, with adjustments made to allow for different turnouts
and different voting patterns for local and general elections.

In many cases, wards are divided between several old constituencies or between new constituencies.
So the same ward may be shown more than once, but the electorate shown will reflect that ward sub-section.

Election results from a recent local election are given. This is usually the local election closest to 2015
from the period 2012-2015.
For multiple-member wards, the votes shown are the sum of the votes cast for all candidates of each party.
A negative number indicates candidate(s) elected unopposed.

Calculation method

There are two problems with using the raw (actual) local election results to imply
general election results ward-by-ward. Firstly, turnout can be different between local and general elections, which
means that the total number of local votes cast does not equal the number of votes cast in each old seat at the general election.
To correct for this, we adjust the local votes to match the general election turnout. Each ward's result is scaled,
whilst keeping constant the percentage support for each party, so that the total turnout adds up to the old seat's general election
turnout. All wards in the old seat are assumed to have the same percentage turnout.

Secondly, even though we now have the correct number of votes in the old seat, the party totals will not match the general
election result. Some parties do better at the local election than the general election, and others do vice versa. We call
these strong and weak parties respectively.
The next step is to transfer votes from strong parties to weak parties. This is done by taking votes
proportionally away from strong parties and putting them in a transfer pool. For instance if a party got 12,500 local votes,
but only 10,000 general election
votes, it will lose 20% over all the wards. These votes in each ward will be put in the ward's transfer pool and allocated
to the weak parties. Weak parties will get votes transferred to them in proportion to the votes they need over the old seat.
For instance, if two weak parties need 4,000 and 1,000 votes respectively, the first party will get 80% of each ward's transfer pool
and the second party will get 20% of each ward's transfer pool. The transfer
of votes between parties is done using the Electoral Calculus Transition Model.